Finding Arizona's Pages

Monday, June 29, 2020

Granite – Bedrock of the Earth


Credit:  Linda & Dr. Dick Buscher

1.  John Muir once described the Sierra Nevada Mountain Range of Central California as the “Range of Light” because of the reflected sunlight that always seems to glisten from the many majestic peaks.  He said that these majestic granite peaks were “so luminous, that it seems to be not clothed with light, but wholly composed of it, like the wall of some celestial city.”  


Credit:  Linda & Dr. Dick Buscher

2.  Granite is so common here that it is called the “stone heart of the Sierra.”  Geologists believe that these exposed mountain top granite peaks extend downward into the earths crust for over 20 miles.  In fact, granite is a prime product of tectonic plate collisions, forming the major part of the North American Continent’s foundation - the bedrock.  Massive outcroppings of granite can be found in over thirty states of the United States.  


 Credit:  Linda & Dr. Dick Buscher

3.  Granite is an igneous rock, formed by the solidification and cooling of magma some 20 – 140 miles below the earth’s crust.  In this underground region temperatures reach 1,500∞ C. forming pockets of liquid magma. Three factors come into play, allowing the magma to begin its journey toward the surface; the underground lithostatic pressure, some 35,000 times greater than atmospheric pressure, the magma being less dense than the surrounding solid rock, resulting in the magma “floating” upward and the melting of adjacent rock during its upward journey creating spaces into which the magma flows.


Credit:  Linda & Dr. Dick Buscher

4.  As the magma cools to about 1000∞ C, small crystals of minerals such as feldspar, quartz, mica and more begin to form.  The process is very slow and as the different mineral crystals begin to grow together, they begin to create an interlocking atomic framework.  After a long cooling period, the molten magma solidifies, creating a hard stone made totally of inter-grown crystals.  It is these interlocking crystals that give granite its unique glitter and sparkle.


Credit:  Linda & Dr. Dick Buscher

5.  Some of the highest mountain ranges in the world (the Andes, the Himalayas as well as the Rockies) are composed of massive granite mountains.  In the United States, both Mt. Whitney (14,505ft/4,421m) and Mt. McKinley (20,320 ft/ 6,194m) are both granite plutons, part of an even more massive granite blatholith.  And when the forces of erosion begin to remove softer rock layers interspersed with the hard granite, magnificent valleys are formed like the Yosemite Valley shown here.  


  
Credit:  Linda & Dr. Dick Buscher

6.  In the Yosemite Valley the force of erosion responsible for carving such a natural paradise were massive glaciers.  For the last 30 million years glaciers have moved into and then retreated from the valley.  The last period of glaciation occurred during the Pleistocene Epoch ending only 11,700 years ago.  Ahead of the advancing ice is pushed tons of gravel, sand and granite boulders known as till which marks the end of the glacial advance.  



Credit:  Linda & Dr. Dick Buscher

7.  Other forces of erosion and weathering are always working to tear down the massive granite mountains and outcroppings.  Exfoliation joints of sheet joints are parallel surface fractures in granite rock that lead to the “peeling off” of the rock surface similar to that of peeling off the layers of an onion.  Exfoliation joints are common in many different geological areas and geologists continue to work on an agreeable theory of exfoliation joint formation. 



Credit:  Linda & Dr. Dick Buscher

8.   Exfoliation has causes the formation of some of the most spectacular of granite mountain features known as granite exfoliation domes.  These unique natural structures are found in granite mountain ranges worldwide.  From Corcovado Mountain in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, to Stone Mountain in American state of Georgia, to Half Dome (shown here) of the Sierra Nevada Mountains, granite domes create awe-inspiriting natural features unique to granite.  



Credit:  Linda & Dr. Dick Buscher

9.  In many areas where granite bedrock is close to the surface, topsoil is very shallow.  Plant roots, like those of this ponderosa pine tree (Pinus ponderosa), seek any small crack in the hard granite rock to anchor the majestic tree to the hillside.   The intrusion of plant roots continues the weathering process of these great, granite mountains.  



Credit:  Linda & Dr. Dick Buscher

10.  Tree roots and lichen work on this group of granite boulders in the mountainous areas near Keystone, South Dakota.  These forms of biological weathering work with the forces of erosion to constantly break down the massive mountains of granite   



Credit:  Linda & Dr. Dick Buscher

11.  The Grand Teton is the highest mountain in the Grant Teton National Park of Wyoming.  Here silica-rich magma crystallized deep underground and the moved upward to form the park’s highest granite peaks. 



Credit:  Linda & Dr. Dick Buscher

12.  El Capitan is a granite monolith found in Yosemite National Park.  It rises some 3,000 feet (900 m) from the floor of the Yosemite Valley.  The coarse grain granite that makes up the marvelous wall is approximately 100 million years old.  It is the largest monolith of granite in the world.



Credit:  Linda & Dr. Dick Buscher

13.  El Capitan is also one of the favorite rock climbing venues in the world.  It was first climbed in 1958 and today over 70 big wall routes allow climbers from all over the world to make the ascent.  The 3,000-foot climb has been made in less than 2 hours but the average climbing party takes between 4 – 6 days.  During the climbing season, from spring to fall, dozens of climbers can be seen on the face of this granite giant, moving slowly toward the towering summit.



Credit:  Linda & Dr. Dick Buscher

14.  The granite mountains of the world are not only used by outdoor enthusiasts but also by the world’s great rock sculptors.  The giant heads of the four American Presidents were carved by Gutzon and Lincoln Borglum into the granite face of Mt Rushmore in South Dakota.  The Precambrian period batholith magma rose into pre-existing mica schist some 1.6 billion years ago resulting in this granite outcropping.  Carving of the monument began in 1927 and was stopped in 1941.



Credit:  Linda & Dr. Dick Buscher

15.  Thus is the story of the granite, a major product of tectonic plate collision.  Mankind has used it for centuries to build his homes as well as his most spectacular buildings.  And, because it is so naturally hard, it has resisted the forces of erosion and weathering for eons resulting in the formation of some of the most spectacular places on earth.

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